Difference between revisions of "Martin Taylor"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(Old Etonian category)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Formerly Barclays (with Aims of Industry's [[Gerald Mobbs]]) which helped staff Blair's constituency office. Gordon Brown asked multimillionaire Taylor to drastically reform the benefit systems. Secretary of the Bilderberg conference,nowchairman of WH Smith, he joined the IPPR and compiled their notorious Commission on PPPs which insisted there should be 'no ideological barriers to private sector involvement in "core" public services such as clinical and intermediate health care, the management of education and local government services.' (1)
+
Formerly [[Barclays]] (with [[Aims of Industry]]'s [[Gerald Mobbs]]) which helped staff Blair's constituency office. [[Gordon Brown]] asked multimillionaire Taylor to drastically reform the benefit systems. Secretary of the [[Bilderberg Group]] conference,now chairman of [[WH Smith]], he joined the [[IPPR]] and compiled their notorious Commission on PPPs which insisted there should be 'no ideological barriers to private sector involvement in "core" public services such as clinical and intermediate health care, the management of education and local government services.' {{ref|1}}
  
Taylor is thought to be involved in setting up the PFI: launched in 1993, when Ministers and Treasury Officials fronted a CBI conference to 'explore changes in government policy', after Trafalgar House, Wimpy and big UK and US banks had secretly visited the Treasury earlier to abolish their 'Ryrie rules'. These had prevented private money going in to public projects stating that it could only be used in place of public spending and that all private sector proposals had to be cheaper than any public sector alternative. (2)
+
Taylor is thought to be involved in setting up the PFI: launched in 1993, when Ministers and Treasury Officials fronted a [[CBI]] conference to 'explore changes in government policy', after [[Trafalgar House]], [[Wimpy]] and big UK and US banks had secretly visited the Treasury earlier to abolish their 'Ryrie rules'. These had prevented private money going in to public projects stating that it could only be used in place of public spending and that all private sector proposals had to be cheaper than any public sector alternative. {{ref|2}}
  
Notes
 
  
1.http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/jul2001/ippr-j06.shtml  
+
== Notes ==
2. Evening Standard 5 April 1993
+
 
 +
#{{note|1}} Jean Shaoul, WSWS Website, 6th July 2001 [http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/jul2001/ippr-j06.shtml Britain: Government think tank sets out plans for privatisation of essential services]
 +
#{{note|2}}  Evening Standard 5 April 1993
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Old Etonians|Taylor, Martin]]

Latest revision as of 02:25, 17 April 2010

Formerly Barclays (with Aims of Industry's Gerald Mobbs) which helped staff Blair's constituency office. Gordon Brown asked multimillionaire Taylor to drastically reform the benefit systems. Secretary of the Bilderberg Group conference,now chairman of WH Smith, he joined the IPPR and compiled their notorious Commission on PPPs which insisted there should be 'no ideological barriers to private sector involvement in "core" public services such as clinical and intermediate health care, the management of education and local government services.' [1]

Taylor is thought to be involved in setting up the PFI: launched in 1993, when Ministers and Treasury Officials fronted a CBI conference to 'explore changes in government policy', after Trafalgar House, Wimpy and big UK and US banks had secretly visited the Treasury earlier to abolish their 'Ryrie rules'. These had prevented private money going in to public projects stating that it could only be used in place of public spending and that all private sector proposals had to be cheaper than any public sector alternative. [2]


Notes

  1. ^ Jean Shaoul, WSWS Website, 6th July 2001 Britain: Government think tank sets out plans for privatisation of essential services
  2. ^ Evening Standard 5 April 1993